Taylor v. Jones
Taylor v. Jones
Opinion of the Court
This is an unusual, if not an anomalous, proceeding. An election was held in beat 18, Walker county, under the general laws of this state, for the purpose of determining whether or not that beat should be declared a stock law district —that is, a district in which it should be unlawful for stock or domestic animals to run at large. By virtue of the election, and the order of the commissioners’ court, such a district was so established.
One Jones, appellee here, a resident of the district, filed in the circuit'court of Walker county a petition for certiorari to quash the proceedings in the commissioners’ court establishing the district. The writ or allocatur issued, and the probate judge of the county, who is ex officio clerk of the commissioners’ court, in response to the writ, sent up a certified copy of the proceedings, and also the original papers filed in that court to establish the district.
A hearing was had on the petition and the return thereto. Appearances by counsel for and against the petition for certiorari are shown. Testimony was heard for and against the granting of the petition; and after a full hearing the court found and adjudged that the proceeding in the commissioners’ court was void, and quashed such proceeding, thus abolishing the stock law district, or annulling the proceedings establishing it.
No appeal was taken from this order.' Four or five months thereafter, and after the term of the court at which the proceedings in the commissioners’ court were quashed had expired, the appellant, a resident of the precinct, filed a petition in the circuit court, praying the court to set aside and annul its former order, rendered at a prior term, quashing the proceedings of the commissioners’ court, on the ground that the proceeding in the circuit court was void on its face and of no effect. This was not a motion for a new trial, during the term, nor under the four-months statute. This petitioner was not a party to any of the proceedings. The circuit court entertained, but denied, his petition, and taxed him with the costs, and from the judgment or order to such effect petitioner prosecutes this appeal.
Whether, section 4143 of the Code applies to proceedings commenced by petition, rather than by complaint, it is not necessary to decide, because, without the aid of this statute, we are not willing to hold that the .judgment of the circuit court was void on its face, though it might have been erroneous. But as to this it is unnecessary to decide, and we do not even intimate that it was erroneous.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- TAYLOR Et Al. v. JONES
- Cited By
- 8 cases
- Status
- Published